LOL, sorry. It's the best I could do on short notice. If no one has it by tomorrow morning, I'll give a hint, wait a little while and then give the answer. Or maybe leave it until Monday?
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I think if you just number both the same way, for example clockwise, then there will always be one number lining up.
Remember that the numbers would be facing each other, so one set would be reversed.
Number every hole with the same number, one will have to be correct
Number all the plug points the same, and on the socket from 1-7... that way one will always line up!
BAH!!!! someone beat me to it...
That is not the answer that I was looking for, but it is a great answer and I'm gonna give it to you for that :)
The answer I was looking for is: number them in the order 1526374 (either clockwise or anti-). This combination ensures that at every rotation one number will be correct. I think it requires too much thought for a Friday though, so Ike_009, you're up...
You're a driver on a bus, at the first stop 4 people get on, then at the 2nd 3 people get on. At the 3rd stop 2 people get off and 5 get on at stop four, the line ends at stop five and everyone has to climb off.
Question what colour are the bus drivers eye's?
Right, another easy friday riddle please
Ill start us off for the week, hope you dont mind Eugene?
Which is faster, hot or cold and why?
You can't catch a hot.
Which English word retains the same pronunciation, after you take away four of its five letters?
So close, but no.
weeeeeee
lol
Why do I get the feeling everyone knows the answer, but no-one wants to give it?
Hopefully not as bad as the one from Friday... and If you get it this time Eugene, I'll make sure that you get due credit :D
In a factory, there are ten sacks of goods, each with ten goods weighing 1 kg each (total 10 kg). A worker tells the quality control person that one of the sacks is lighter than the others, filled with ten .9 kg items, totalling 9 kg, instead of the normal 10 kg sacks. The quality control man decided that he could find the lighter sack with only one weighing. How did he do this?
Put all 10 sacks on the scale and take them off one at a time until the weight becomes a multiple of 10. Then the last sack he took off is the 9kg sack. Not sure if that counts as one weighing though.
Perhaps the QC guy should ask the worker which sack is the 9kg sack, and just weigh that one to make sure
It says 10 sacks with 10 goods in. From looking sat the bag, you should be able to see which one looks different? Then weigh just that one? (if 10 x something = 10 kg and 10 x something = 9kg, surely the bags will look different?)
If it counts as "one weighing", he can keep tossing bags on the scale, one at a time, until the total goes up by 9kg instead of a full 10kg.
Edit: decimal point
It has to be something like this:
- number the bags left to right
- take from each bag, the amount of items that the bag is numbered with
- weigh all the items you removed (ie, it will be less than the total amount added up, as one is lighter)
- subtract that from the total weight of all bags
- the answer will be a number, indicating which numbered bag contained the fewer items
It's the only weigh (:D) I see this to be doable?!?